Book Reading Shit
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- superbowl shuffle
- Official Clamp School Defender
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- Joined: Mon Apr 07, 2003 4:52 am
- Location: CAsE SenSiTiVe
I didn't like Anthem but it's a politically charged book and those are bound to put some readers off.
I do however really like A Short History of Nearly Everything. I felt like the writing was a bit patronizing, but I guess it wasn't written for science majors. I particularly like the part about how scientists arrived at their first estimation of the mass of the earth. It had something to do with putting a an object next to a mountain and seeing how much the mountain's gravitational pull offset the Earth's gravity. Well anyway I found it interesting.
I do however really like A Short History of Nearly Everything. I felt like the writing was a bit patronizing, but I guess it wasn't written for science majors. I particularly like the part about how scientists arrived at their first estimation of the mass of the earth. It had something to do with putting a an object next to a mountain and seeing how much the mountain's gravitational pull offset the Earth's gravity. Well anyway I found it interesting.
[size=75:lh51rn9h][b:lh51rn9h]When the 5 o'clock whistle blows, so do I.[/b:lh51rn9h]
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it lives!
I just read Childhood's End by Arthur C. Clarke. It was pretty good even if it had troubles staying away from sci-fi sterotypes (which is forgiveable when it really wasn't a sterotype then.) I've read some of his books before (2001,
Rama) and on the whole enjoyed them, this one was better than those two though.
I read the book because I heard it was of great inspiration to Evangelion. Continuing my backwards trace I'm going to read some books by Olaf Stapledon who inspired Clarke and many other noteable sci-fi writers.
I just read Childhood's End by Arthur C. Clarke. It was pretty good even if it had troubles staying away from sci-fi sterotypes (which is forgiveable when it really wasn't a sterotype then.) I've read some of his books before (2001,
Rama) and on the whole enjoyed them, this one was better than those two though.
I read the book because I heard it was of great inspiration to Evangelion. Continuing my backwards trace I'm going to read some books by Olaf Stapledon who inspired Clarke and many other noteable sci-fi writers.
*POW* *CLANK* *PING*
- Zandor 12
- What has science done???
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I've been reading Death Note for a few weeks now and I'm pretty into it; up to Vol. 6 at the moment. This kid, Light Yagami, finds a notebook called the Death Note that has the power to kill anybody whose name is written into it, and decides to use it to kill the world's criminals. The elite detective known only as L is hired to track down Light, whom the world has dubbed Kira, and the two begin a battle of wits to uncover each other's identities. Pretty engrossing stuff, at least for me.
- Zenith Nadir
- this is my hammer
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- Location: between the black and white spiders
- Zenith Nadir
- this is my hammer
- Posts: 2767
- Joined: Wed Mar 12, 2003 11:40 am
- Location: between the black and white spiders
it totally is (i got it as soon as it came out)
i liked the story with the girl in the box best, especially the ending
also it's funny how i return to volumes 2 and 3 and realise that cool dude animators i've only realised existed the last couple of years like don herzfeldt (rejected) and bill plympton (your face) made comics for the anthology. it's the gift that keeps on giving!

i liked the story with the girl in the box best, especially the ending
also it's funny how i return to volumes 2 and 3 and realise that cool dude animators i've only realised existed the last couple of years like don herzfeldt (rejected) and bill plympton (your face) made comics for the anthology. it's the gift that keeps on giving!

he looked upon the world and saw it was still depraved 
Overall: Rotton egg for breakfast

Overall: Rotton egg for breakfast
- Zenith Nadir
- this is my hammer
- Posts: 2767
- Joined: Wed Mar 12, 2003 11:40 am
- Location: between the black and white spiders
i've been reading the moomin books by tove jansson
currently partway through "moominpappa at sea"
my only real previous exposure to the moomins was the japanese/scandinavian cartoon, so this is new territory for me
they're really good
currently partway through "moominpappa at sea"
my only real previous exposure to the moomins was the japanese/scandinavian cartoon, so this is new territory for me
they're really good
he looked upon the world and saw it was still depraved 
Overall: Rotton egg for breakfast

Overall: Rotton egg for breakfast
I just finished Neverwhere by Neil Gaiman a couple of days ago, it was an awesome book, but I didn't know it was the novelization of a BBC series! The series was pretty ridiculous in the same way that every BBC fantasy/sci-fi show is; lots of really, really bad special effects. Prolly gonna cut into one of the 7 YEAR'S BEST IN SCIENCE FICTION that I picked up from the local library's book sale.
I'm not much of a reader, since I prefer writing over reading. I just finish writing my novella, The Watcher. It's about this women whose husband is stalking her, but not because he doesn't trust her. He does it because in truth he's a serial-killer whose decided to clean up his life. Now he simply stalks his wife. Lying to her about everything.